Georg F. Train, the young Bostonian, who has been
introducing the horse railroad system in England, lately made another speech on
the American question, taking the secession side of it. The speech was delivered in the Temple Forum,
London, and the following is a specimen of Mr. Train’s advocacy of the South:
The Northerners think they have the very best Constitution
in the world, because they have placed their Temple on their four corner stones
– Wisdom, Mercy, Justice and Union! But
we in Secessia have based our Constitution and reared our Temple of Despotism
on one acknowledged corner stone – Negro Slavery.
Now I never heard of a house with only one corner stone
[laughter;] there must of necessity be four, and these are the other three – Perjury! Robbery!
Treachery! On these four columns
we have raised that edition of Despotism for which I have risen to speak.
[Cheers.] The question of to-night is
very strangely expressed. It asks
whether the North or South is right.
This is what I call an open and shut question – it is difficult to tell
Blucher from Wellington. I can answer in
the affirmative or the negative. [Laughter.]
I maintain that the North has acted most wrongly by us –
that the North was wrong in give us precedence in all matters of State – [hear]
– wrong in giving us, as the honorable gentleman from Alabama says, the power
to elect nearly all the Presidents – [hear] – that the North was wrong in
giving the South all the naval officers – wrong in taking our men to make all
the army officers. [Cheers.]
I maintain the North was wrong in allowing us to rob the
treasury at Washington – wrong in allowing us to absorb all the Northern spoils
– and wrong in allowing us to assume all the civil and military power. [Cheers.] I tell you that we in Secessia despise the
North. * * *
I say that the South has a right to complain of the way in
which the question in debate this night is considered in this country. [Here Mr. Train, with biting sarcasm, turned
his Southern argument on England.] We
blame you for deceiving us in this great issue.
We have to thank you for hastening to acknowledge us as belligerents,
but we have a right to blame you for giving all your sympathies to the
North. [Loud applause.] We blame you because all your press – the London
Times and every other of your news journals – has given its voice in favor of
the North. [Loud laughter and cheers,
the audience fully entering into the spirit of the sarcasm.] You cannot spare one single journal to the
South. We blame you for not giving every
assistance to our vessel of war (the Nashville) when in Southampton docks! [Applause, and “Good again.”] Your affections have been centered on the
Tuscarora. Your affections have been centered
on the Tuscarora. You have never
assisted one-half of our enterprising navy – the Sumter – now in the
Mediterranean.
I have heard, but I cannot believe it, that the reason the
North has not caught her is because the North wishes her left to float on the
ocean to show Europe what the North might do with five thousand similar vessels
afloat. [“Oh, Oh,” and cheers.] We blame you, and we have a right to blame
you, that you have not long since admitted the claims of our great Confederacy,
as we were led, by unofficial correspondence, to think you would have done long since. [Hear, hear.]
Again, we have to complain that you have not sufficiently acknowledged
our established valor: have you forgotten how ten thousand of our grand chivalry,
after two days’ fighting, drove ninety of the Northern men out of Fort
Sumter? [Applause and laughter.] Then again, did we not, in open daylight,
assassinate in Alexandria their Colonel Ellsworth? * *
Reference has been made to Bull Run. It proves, as I told them at Hanley, what I
have had much trouble in getting English people to believe – that the American
people are never troubled with the gout.
[Laughter.] But the Northerners
are not the only people who have the right of claiming all such laurels. [Hear.]
You ought to give us some credit on that account also. Look when the Northerners landed at Port
Royal and Beaufort; we showed them powers of pedestrianism throwing even
Deerfoot into the shade. [Laughter and
cheers.] When the Northern hordes
landed, the chivalry of Georgia went first, South Carolina next, and the
Germans last, until at last there was but one poor old nigger left. [Loud cheers.] I have never saw such speed; they reached
Charleston in much shorter time that I should have thought possible.
Why did the gentlemen from Secessia omit this praiseworthy fact
when alluding to our chivalry? Then,
again, read the papers of Saturday and to-day.
Have you not read how 10,000 men left the field whereon lay the bodies of
Zolicoffer and Payton? They went quickly
because they were anxious to fight the battle in Tennessee. [Confusion.]
Don’t get excited secessionists, for I am to-night on the side of the
South. [Applause and Laughter.] The word Secessia signifies Revolver – Bowie Knife
– Lynch Law – Tar – Feathers, and the noble science of Repudiation – [Hear,] –
while the word Unionists or Yankee possesses the mean interpretation of
Education – Virtue – Enterprise and Honesty.
[Cheers.] You are not perhaps
aware that in Mobile – in Charleston – in New Orleans – are all the
manufactories of America.
[Laughter.] That all the shipping
of the United States comes from the South, and I can tell you that the North
have no need to boast of their Eli Whitney and Cotton Gin! [Laughter, and good.]
– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye,
Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, March 15, 1862, p. 1
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